Facing Some Of The Highest Rates In The Nation, Connecticut’s Electric Customers Struggle

For the past decade, Connecticut’s residential electric customers have paid bills that are among the highest in the continental United States, but there isn’t one grand explanation for Connecticut’s sky-high electric bills.

The reality is more complicated, said Joseph Rosenthal, an attorney with the state Office of Consumer Counsel.

“It’s a hundred different things,” Rosenthal said.

Here’s one example: economics. Connecticut’s salaries are above the national average. But layered on top of that, Rosenthal said, are bigger economic trends: like a decline in industrial electric customers.

Those are the big-time manufacturers who used to suck up lots of electricity, which helped to offset costs for residents.

“We have less industrial load then we used to,” Rosenthal said. “It can make electricity cheaper for everybody when you a high-revenue customer like that.”

Then there are resource issues. In-state wind and hydro are bad or non-existent. Nearly 40 percent of Connecticut’s electric consumption comes from natural gas, but there is an issue there, too.

“All the natural gas that comes here has to come from somewhere else, typically from an interstate pipeline,” Rosenthal said.